240 likes | 262 Vues
Water Resources and Water Pollution. Water for human. Cultural Eutrophication – natural nutrient enrichment of lakes. Major categories of water Pollutants. 1. Infectious Agents . Examples : bacteria, viruses, protozoa, and parasitic worms Major human sources : human and animal wastes
E N D
Cultural Eutrophication – natural nutrient enrichment of lakes
1. Infectious Agents • Examples : bacteria, viruses, protozoa, and parasitic worms • Major human sources : human and animal wastes • Harmful effects : disease
2. Oxygen Demanding wastes • Examples : organic waste such as animal manure and plant debris that can be decomposed by aerobic (oxygen requiring) bacteria • Major human sources : sewage, animal feedlots, paper mills, and food processing facilities. • Harmful effects : large populations of bacteria decomposing these wastes can degrade water quality by depleting water of dissolved oxygen. This causes fish and other forms of oxygen-consuming aquatic life to die.
3. Inorganic chemicals • Examples : water soluble (1) acids, (2) compounds of toxic metals such as lead (Pb), arsenic (As), and selenium (Se), and (3) salts such as NaCl in ocean water and fluorides (F) found in some soils. • Major human sources : surface runoff, industrial effluents, and household cleansers. • Harmful effects : can (1) make freshwater unusable for drinking or irrigation, (2) cause skin cancers and crippling spinal and neck damage (F), (3) damage the nervous system, liver, and kidneys (Pb and As), (4) harm fish and other aquatic life, (5) lower crop yields, and (6) accelerate corrosion of metals exposed to such water.
4. Organic chemicals • Examples : oil, gasoline, plastics, pesticides, cleaning solvents, detergents • Major human sources : industrial effluents, household cleansers, surface runoff from farms and yards • Harmful effects : can (1) threaten human health by causing nervous system damage (some pesticides), reproductive disorders (some solvents), and some cancers (gasoline, oil, and some solvents) (2) harm fish and wildlife
5. Plant Nutrients • Examples : water soluble compounds containing nitrate (NO3), phospate (PO4), and ammonium (NH4) ions • Major human sources : sewage, manure, and runoff of agricultural and urban fertilizers. • Harmful effects : can cause excessive growth of algae and other aquatic plants, which die, decay, deplete water of dissolved oxygen, and kill fish. Drinking water with excessive levels of nitrates lowers the oxygen-carrying capacity of the blood and can kill unborn children and infants (blue baby syndrome).
6. Sediment • Examples : soil, silt • Major human sources : land erosion • Harmful effects : can (1) cloud water and reduce photosynthesis, (2) disrupt aquatic food webs, (3) carry pesticides, bacteria, and other harmful substances, (4) settle out and destroy feeding and spawning grounds of fish, and (5) clog and fill lakes, artificial reservoirs, stream channels, and harbors.
7. Radioactive materials • Examples : radioactive isotopes of iodine, radon, uranium, cesium, and thorium • Major human sources : nuclear power plants, mining and processing of uranium and other ores, nuclear weapons production, natural sources. • Harmful effects : genetic mutations, miscarriages, birth defects, and certain cancers.
8. Heat (thermal pollution) • Examples : heat • Major human sources : water cooling of electric power plants and some types of industrial plants. Almost half of all water withdrawn in the US each year is for cooling electric power plants. • Harmful effects : lower dissolved oxygen levels and makes aquatic organisms more vulnerable to disease, parasites, and toxic chemicals. When a power plants first opens or shuts down for repair, fish and other organism adapted to a particular temperature range can be killed by the abrupt change in water temperature-known as thermal shock.